Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6239068 Health Policy 2015 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Health workforce policy in Europe lacks integration and coordination.•Gaps in governance combine to create inefficient use of health human resources.•Organizational and educational innovations need support from national and EU policies.•Multi-level governance can promote health workforce innovation.

Health workforce needs have moved up on the reform agendas, but policymaking often remains 'piece-meal work' and does not respond to the complexity of health workforce challenges. This article argues for innovation in healthcare governance as a key to greater sustainability of health human resources. The aim is to develop a multi-level approach that helps to identify gaps in governance and improve policy interventions. Pilot research into nursing and medicine in Germany, carried out between 2013 and 2015 using a qualitative methodology, serves to illustrate systems-based governance weaknesses. Three explorative cases address major responses to health workforce shortages, comprising migration/mobility of nurses, reform of nursing education, and gender-sensitive work management of hospital doctors. The findings illustrate a lack of connections between transnational/EU and organizational governance, between national and local levels, occupational and sector governance, and organizations/hospital management and professional development. Consequently, innovations in the health workforce need a multi-level governance approach to get transformative potential and help closing the existing gaps in governance.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Public Health and Health Policy
Authors
, ,